labingi: (Default)
[personal profile] labingi
At my request, our tenant checked on our old tree, Senex. This photo is a little hard to interpret, even if you know the tree, but the trunk, which was largely old and rotten burned out completely.



Senex was an old tree and certainly in its declining years, but I am very saddened by its passing. It has always been there, ever since I can remember. I'm glad that several years ago, I developed the habit of saying goodbye to our named trees on the morning I'd leave from a visit. We had six of them throughout my childhood. We lost Howgie to the oak fungus a few years ago. In this fire, we have lost Quercus Frater and Senex. I am hopeful that Quercus Maxima, Drus, and Phagos [edit: Phegos, my bad] have survived. Even so, we've now lost three of six. I used to think I might see one or maybe two of the die in my lifetime. Now, I feel there's a real chance I'll see them all gone in the next few years. This is not normal. This is climate crisis.

Goodbye, Senex, my grandparent.

Date: 2017-10-31 08:08 pm (UTC)
vilakins: Vila with stars superimposed (Default)
From: [personal profile] vilakins
That's a strange correlation! I thought it would be right-wing arrogance.

In general we haven't seen much change, possibly because we're surrounded by ocean, but in the last year, since November in fact, it's been wet, wet, wet. We get the occasional gorgeous day but, like Auckland was, we rarely get several in a row. The wet year may just be a normal variation, but who knows with weather being so complex and interconnected.

It's not as good as it might seem for areas that have evolved dry-climate plants.

Date: 2017-11-01 08:37 pm (UTC)
vilakins: The word chocolate in many different languages (chocolate)
From: [personal profile] vilakins
Ha, I read it as Phagos!

My father was a classics scholar who knew Latin (which he taught me) and Greek. (When he died, a lot of Greeks came to the funeral and it turned out that he used to go down to the hall where they met for Orthodox services and chat to them in ancient Greek when they came out - and they understood each other pretty well!) He had a lot of Greek and Roman legends, stories, and mythology in his study, and I devoured them. I had no idea how to say the names though; it was 'you-lie-seas', penny-lope', 'menny-louse' etc.

Date: 2017-11-03 04:48 am (UTC)
vilakins: Vila with stars superimposed (semper ubi sub ubi)
From: [personal profile] vilakins
I'd be interested to know when you find out - what an unusual family tradition!

Perhaps you could also find someone who speaks modern Greek, as my father's experience shows they would possibly understand.

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